85 research outputs found

    Assessing the ABL 500 blood gas analyser

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    The ABL 500 blood gas analyser from Radiometer has cordless electrodes and does not use a humidifier for calibrating gases. During the evaluation of the analytical performance of this instrument, the problem of p02 accuracy was approached by comparing the values obtained with two kinds of tonometry (film and bubble). An acceptable level of imprecision was demonstrated for all measured parameters. For within-run precision, with tonometry, coefficients of variation (CV) were ≆0.37% for pO2 and ≆0.52% for pCO2. A CV of 1.76% was found for day-to-day precision for both p02 and pCO2. In the linearity study, with both tonometry methods, and in the inter-instrument comparisons (the ABL was compared with the Ciba Corning 178), pO2 values obtained on the ABL 500 exhibited a slight overestimation above 150 mmHg (2.2-3.4% at 600 mmHg). This minor discrepancy is discussed with reference to the new design of the pO2 electrode, the algorithm for pO2 correction and the tonometry procedure. The results reported in this paper stress the importance of pO2 accuracy assessment for the evaluation of blood gas analysers

    Assessment of recently developed blood gas analysers: a multicentre evaluation

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    Providing guidelines for testing expected inaccuracy and imprecision is still a matter under debate. The Expert Panel of the French Society of Clinical Chemistry has developed a protocol, which was based on a comparative multi-centre evaluation of four instruments: the Ciba-Corning 278, the Instrumentation Laboratory 1306, the Nova SP 5 and the ABL 330. The purpose was to evaluate the analytical performance and efficiency of the analysers. Another aim was to design a valid approach for evaluating any new system. As buffered aqueous solutions and fluorocarbon emulsions give only partial information, tonometered blood was used at different levels of gas mixture, even though it is both difficult and time-consuming. Comparisons have been established on patients' blood samples with the analysers currently used in the evaluation sites. The tests showed that the four analysers have the same degree of precision, and interinstrument comparisons demonstrated a very high degree of reliability

    Plant lectins: the ties that bind in root symbiosis and plant defense

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    Lectins are a diverse group of carbohydrate-binding proteins that are found within and associated with organisms from all kingdoms of life. Several different classes of plant lectins serve a diverse array of functions. The most prominent of these include participation in plant defense against predators and pathogens and involvement in symbiotic interactions between host plants and symbiotic microbes, including mycorrhizal fungi and nitrogen-fixing rhizobia. Extensive biological, biochemical, and molecular studies have shed light on the functions of plant lectins, and a plethora of uncharacterized lectin genes are being revealed at the genomic scale, suggesting unexplored and novel diversity in plant lectin structure and function. Integration of the results from these different types of research is beginning to yield a more detailed understanding of the function of lectins in symbiosis, defense, and plant biology in general

    Laboratory medicine: Meeting the needs of Mediterranean nations

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    Management et architecture des services de biologie dans le projet medical : le biologiste consultant Villepinte, 8 decembre 1993

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    Available at INIST (FR), Document Supply Service, under shelf-number : Y 30228 / INIST-CNRS - Institut de l'Information Scientifique et TechniqueSIGLEFRFranc

    Cellular accumulation and distribution of uranium and lead in osteoblastic cells as a function of their speciation

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    International audienceUranium (U) and lead (Pb) are accumulated and fixed for long periods in bone, impairing remodeling processes. Their toxicity to osteoblasts, the cells responsible for bone formation, is poorly documented. It has been previously shown that cytotoxicity and phenotypic effects of both metals on osteoblasts are highly influenced by metal speciation. Differences in sensitivity between cell types have been underlined as well. In this paper, cellular accumulation of U and Pb in cultured and primary osteoblastic cells was assessed by trace element analysis. Distribution of different species at the cell scale was investigated by electron microscopy.Internalization of both metals was shown to be correlated to cytotoxicity and population growth recovery after exposure. For each metal, the amount of metal uptake leading to 50% cell death was shown to be speciation-dependent. Scanning and transmission electron microscopy showed the formation of precipitates with phosphate in lysosomes for both metals, whose role in toxicity or cell defence remains to be clarified. Although a clear link was established between cytotoxicity and accumulation, differences in sensitivity observed in terms of speciation could not be fully explained and other studies seem necessary
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